Before we release the first of our series of short documentaries we shot out at CERN earlier this year with Professor Lucie Green, let's dive back into the archive of The Incomplete Map of the Cosmic Genome so you can make sure you're up to speed on particle physics and the Higgs Boson.
We shot this with our regular Cosmic Shambles contributor Professor Brian Cox right before the discovery of the Higgs Boson was made official by CERN.
Check out the rest of our content at the Cosmic Shambles Network at http://cosmicshambles.com
Support what we do at http://cosmicshambles.com or check out our Patreon at http://patreon.com/bookshambles
Listen to Brian and Robin Ince's new podcast at http://cosmicshambles.com/loungecast
Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People is back this December. Check out lineups and get tickets at http://cosmicshambles.com/ninelessons

Inspiring science books of 2017 with Brian Cox

Join Professor Brian Cox as we look at the best science writing of 2017, and announce this year’s winning book.
Explore the shortlist from the Royal Society Insight Investment Science Book Prize and discover the most inspirational popular science books and authors of the year.
Selected from hundreds of entries, our six shortlisted books tackle some of life’s biggest questions ranging from human enhancement and gender identity to the evolution of intelligent life. Gain insight into the latest scientific thinking and learn about the complexity of the ecosystems inside us, the puzzling concept of infinity or the current struggles in Alzheimer’s research.
The event discussion, hosted by Professor Brian Cox, features some of the inspiring authors behind these literary works. Take your questions to the panel to learn about their influences, and how a good science book can have the power to change lives.
Kindly supported by Insight Investment.
Join the conversation on the hashtag - #scibooks

"Universal: A Guide to the Cosmos" by Brian Cox & Jeff Foreshaw is an excellent introduction to many of the more difficult concepts related to the latest science of discoveries in this Golden Age of Astronomy.
The book is very accessible to people without an extensive science background, but some familiarity with the latest science will certainly be a help in getting through some of the chapters.
Get the book on Amazon (aff. link):
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Professor Brian Cox Wants People to Switch Their Phones for the Stars | This Morning

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Professor Brian Cox would love to find life on other planets, and wishes more people would stop looking down at their phones and start looking up at the stars.
Broadcast on 27/07/2017
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This Morning - every weekday on ITV from 10:30am.
Join Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield, Ruth Langsford and Eamonn Holmes as we meet the people behind the stories that matter, chat to the hottest celebs and cook up a storm with your favourite chefs!
Dr Zoe and Dr Ranj answer all your health questions, stay stylish with Gok Wan's fabulous fashion, be beautiful with Bryony Blake's top make-up tips, and save money with Martin Lewis.
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Closing session with the Bad Astronomer | Asteroid Day Live from Luxembourg

Relive the Asteroid Day LIVE experience in our video collection featuring the day's individual panels and talks with our asteroid experts. Click through your favourite segments or watch the entire recorded 6-hour broadcast from Luxembourg!
Asteroid Day LIVE from Luxembourg was recorded at the Broadcasting Center Europe on June 30, 2017.
Visit our website for more information: https://asteroidday.org/
Watch this video: https://asteroidday.org/video/live-luxembourg-closing
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Download the video, here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B26qPfEwFxyCbEdwMGFPWGMzb3c

Role of resources in human exploration of space | Asteroid Day Live from Luxembourg

Relive the Asteroid Day LIVE experience in our video collection featuring the day's individual panels and talks with our asteroid experts. Click through your favourite segments or watch the entire recorded 6-hour broadcast from Luxembourg! Brian Cox and his panel discuss the Role of resources in human exploration of space.
Asteroid Day LIVE from Luxembourg was recorded at the Broadcasting Center Europe on June 30, 2017.
Visit our website for more information: https://asteroidday.org/
Watch this video: https://asteroidday.org/video/live-luxembourg-space-resources
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Download the video, here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B26qPfEwFxyCLTJDVFRVaGNubFU

Asteroid Missions and Impact Mitigation Solutions | Asteroid Day Live from Luxembourg

Relive the Asteroid Day LIVE experience in our video collection featuring the day's individual panels and talks with our asteroid experts. Click through your favourite segments or watch the entire recorded 6-hour broadcast from Luxembourg! Brian Cox returns to the studio to talk with his guests about Asteroid Missions and Impact Mitigation Solutions.
Asteroid Day LIVE from Luxembourg was recorded at the Broadcasting Center Europe on June 30, 2017.
Visit our website for more information: https://asteroidday.org/
Watch this video: https://asteroidday.org/video/live-luxembourg-asteroid-mitigation
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Asteroid Discovery and Telescopes | Asteroid Day Live from Luxembourg

Relive the Asteroid Day LIVE experience in our video collection featuring the day's individual panels and talks with our asteroid experts. Click through your favourite segments or watch the entire recorded 6-hour broadcast from Luxembourg! Brian Cox joins us in the studio to host the panel "Asteroid Discovery and Telescopes".
Asteroid Day LIVE from Luxembourg was recorded at the Broadcasting Center Europe on June 30, 2017.
Visit our website for more information: https://asteroidday.org/
Watch this video: https://asteroidday.org/video/live-luxembourg-telescopes
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How Humanity Fell in Love with Space Rocks | Asteroid Day Live from Luxembourg

Relive the Asteroid Day LIVE experience in our video collection featuring the day's individual panels and talks with our asteroid experts. Click through your favourite segments or watch the entire recorded 6-hour broadcast from Luxembourg! “How Humanity Fell in Love with Space Rocks”, a roundtable hosted by Brian Cox, about the history of human asteroid discoveries.
Asteroid Day LIVE from Luxembourg was recorded at the Broadcasting Center Europe on June 30, 2017.
Visit our website for more information: https://asteroidday.org/
Watch this video: https://asteroidday.org/video/live-luxembourg-humanity-in-love
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Brian Cox: Forces of Nature

A bold and breathtaking series taking viewers on a tour of our planet to explain what lies beneath Earth’s startling beauty and ultimately what makes our world work.

'Stargazing Live' to Air Next Month

Professor Brian Cox is bringing back his live series “Stargazing Live” April 4, 5 and 6

Brian Cox and Neil deGrasse Tyson's compelling exploration of what science communication is, drawing on interesting similarities and contrasts between the UK and the US.
“In the UK, we have the BBC - a public serviced broadcaster, in the purest sense of the word - and its mission is to engage and bring people into diversity programming….
What worries me in the US is that when you have multiple channels (such as The Science Channel ) and those channels are “specialist”, you’re in great danger of ghettoising the audience, and you end up preaching to the converted rather that drawing in new people in and introducing them to ideas…” Brian Cox
"Id like to think that what science communication might be going forward - would include more of a direct statement of relevance to how we live our lives, to the role that science plays in politics, to the survival of our species…” Neil deGrasse Tyson

► Brian Cox | Star Lecture | FULL TALK

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Original presentation given June 8, 2011, at The University of Manchester.
Professor Cox begins his lecture around 8:45 (if you want to skip the introductions).
*from 10:42 to 11:15, the video has been edited to simply use a still frame of a picture of the galaxy. This is to prevent an incorrect claim by BBC Worldwide from blocking the content in 244 countries. Thanks for your understanding!
Professor Brian Cox is an English physicist, and Advanced Fellow of particle physics in the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Manchester. He is best known to the public as the presenter of science programmes, especially the Wonders of... series and for popular science books, such as Why Does E=mc²? and The Quantum Universe. He has been the author or co-author of over 950 scientific publications.
Cox has been described as the natural successor for BBC's scientific programming by both David Attenborough and the late Patrick Moore.
This talk was based around two key areas – the importance of studying science and his passion for it. It also centered around key topics the children study as part of their GCSEs.
Playlist of FULL TALKS & DISCUSSIONS: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLwQhUaqidMVD93u7ynvFPjDdn4X9EqZ8a
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Neil deGrasse Tyson & Brian Cox embarrass silly questioners

Useless research, seriously?
Gazing into the galaxy will do us no good?
Awesome reply

Brian Cox presents Science Matters - Climate Change

Climate change is an issue that will affect all of us, and will require global solutions brought about by the collaboration of scientists, the public and governments across the world to face the challenges it presents.
Join Professor Brian Cox, the Royal Society Professor of Public Engagement, as he brings together experts on climate change to discuss key issues for the future of our planet.
Find out more about climate change in our Q&A: https://royalsociety.org/topics-policy/projects/climate-change-evidence-causes/

You asked, Brian Cox answered

In celebration of Professor Brian Cox - A Journey into Deep Space tour, Australia’s Science Channel and Lateral Events gave 6 students around Australia the chance to have their question answered in person. We used those same questions for this video with our guest interviewer, astronomer Dr Alan Duffy!
Don’t forget to check out our space channel for related content: http://www.australiascience.tv/media_category/space

Professor Brian Cox Wouldn't Want To Go On A One-Way Trip To Mars | This Morning

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Broadcast on 28/09/2016
Professor Brian Cox chats about the simple astronomy you can do from your own back garden, and shares his thoughts on the Space X plan to get humans to Mars in just six years.
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This Morning - every weekday on ITV from 10:30am.
Join Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield, Ruth Langsford and Eamonn Holmes as we meet the people behind the stories that matter, chat to the hottest celebs and cook up a storm with your favourite chefs!
Dr Chris Steele answers all your health questions.
Stay stylish with Gok Wan's fabulous fashion, be beautiful with Bryony Blake's top make-up tips, save money with Martin Lewis and get gardening with David Domoney.
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15/08/2016 Australian Senator Malcolm Roberts claims NASA has corrupted data, there is no empirical evidence that humans are causing global warming and the climate models are wrong.
Source: http://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/txt/s4499754.htm

Professor Brian Cox meets: Jim Al-Khalili | University of Surrey

In the latest instalment of the Jim Meets Series we turned the tables and put Professor Jim Al-Khalili in the hot seat. Hosted by Professor Brian Cox (BBC's Wonders of the Universe, Wonders of Life) the conversation established how Jim has become one of the world's foremost leading scientists.
Missed the event? catch up with all the highlights from #JimMeetsBrian across social media with our Storify: http://ow.ly/60yq300CeAW
Discover our programmes in the field of physics: https://www.surrey.ac.uk/subjects/physics

A panel discussion on the history of Stanley Kubrick's film, 2001 A Space Odyssey. Featuring Dr. Brian Cox, with actors Keir Dullea and Gary Lockwood.
To mark the UK re-release of Stanley Kubrick’s iconic 2001: A Space Odyssey, on 30 November 2014 BBC Arts broadcast a 90-minute live discussion from the BFI exploring its influence on art, culture and science.
Radio 3's Matthew Sweet welcomed to the stage a stellar panel including the film’s two stars Keir Dullea and Gary Lockwood, Professor Brian Cox and Sir Christopher Frayling.
Celebrated for its breathtaking beauty, dazzling visual effects and powerful use of music, Kubrick’s film proposed a new kind of pure cinema, set a new benchmark for the aesthetic of sci-fi films and challenged audiences to contemplate its meaning.
The programme was recorded for broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s Free Thinking on Tuesday 2 December at 10pm.

Falling Into A Black Hole | The Real Eye of Harmony Pt.2 | The Science of Doctor Who | BBC

Professor Brian Cox explains what would happen if someone were to fall into a black hole, using the journey of Rufus Hound, as demonstrated in Part 1: http://youtu.be/5qANXixx5SI
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Doctor Who YouTube Channel http://www.youtube.com/user/doctorwho
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This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Explaining the Real Eye of Harmony Pt.1 | The Science of Doctor Who | BBC

Professor Brian Cox demonstrates black holes, or the Eye of Harmony, with the help of throwing Rufus Hound towards one!
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Doctor Who Twitter https://twitter.com/bbcdoctorwho
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

The Speed of Light | The Science of Doctor Who | BBC

Professor Brian Cox explains Einstein's discovery of the limits that the speed of light holds, stopping us from travelling through space and time like the The Doctor does!
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This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Doctor Who Broadcast In Space? | Life on other Planets? Pt.2 | The Science of Doctor Who | BBC

Is heat the key to finding extra-terrestrial life? And more importantly are their aliens out there somewhere watching An Unearthly Child?
Brian Cox investigates.
See part one here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-gOvMJOTHs
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This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
More about the Doctor Who YouTube channel:
Welcome to the official home of Doctor Who on YouTube. Travel through space and time in the TARDIS with the best episode clips dating back to the Doctor's first series in 1963, all the way through dozens of regenerations, from the latest clips of the David Tennant, Matt Smith and Peter Capaldi era to the announcement of Jodie Whittaker as the Thirteenth Doctor! Including brand new trailers, behind-the-scenes footage, exclusive videos and our very own show Doctor Who: The Fan Show - this is the place to find all the best official clips from all 54 years of Doctor Who history. Make sure you are subscribed so that you don’t miss out on brand new videos: http://bit.ly/SubscribeToDoctorWho
And if you have any suggestions for playlists or videos you’d like to see on the channel, then get in touch by leaving us a comment!

Life On Other Planets? Pt.1- Let's Test! | The Science of Doctor Who | Doctor Who | BBC

Professor Brian Cox wants to answer one of the classic questions raised by the Doctor - Does extra-terrestrial life exist in our galaxy? His experiment, undertaken with the help of actor Charles Dance, shows that atomic research is helping to find out. From BBC 2 documentary, The Science of Doctor Who.
See part two here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMVO_UmReTo
Subscribe here for more exclusive Doctor Who clips and content
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The Brand New Doctor Who Website - http://www.doctorwho.tv
Doctor Who YouTube Channel http://www.youtube.com/user/doctorwho
Doctor Who Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DoctorWho
Doctor Who Twitter https://twitter.com/bbcdoctorwho
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
More about the Doctor Who YouTube channel:
Welcome to the official home of Doctor Who on YouTube. Travel through space and time in the TARDIS with the best episode clips dating back to the Doctor's first series in 1963, all the way through dozens of regenerations, from the latest clips of the David Tennant, Matt Smith and Peter Capaldi era to the announcement of Jodie Whittaker as the Thirteenth Doctor! Including brand new trailers, behind-the-scenes footage, exclusive videos and our very own show Doctor Who: The Fan Show - this is the place to find all the best official clips from all 54 years of Doctor Who history. Make sure you are subscribed so that you don’t miss out on brand new videos: http://bit.ly/SubscribeToDoctorWho
And if you have any suggestions for playlists or videos you’d like to see on the channel, then get in touch by leaving us a comment!

Is Time Travel Possible? | The Science of Doctor Who | Doctor Who | BBC

Is Time Travel really Possible? In this clip Professor Brian Cox - a confirmed Doctor Who fan - undertakes an experiment with a light showing that time moves faster for a stationary clock than a moving clock, which appears to move more slowly over the same length of time. His conclusion is that time travel is possible, but only into the future!
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The Brand New Doctor Who Website - http://www.doctorwho.tv
Doctor Who YouTube Channel http://www.youtube.com/user/doctorwho
Doctor Who Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DoctorWho
Doctor Who Twitter https://twitter.com/bbcdoctorwho
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Brian Cox Particle Physics Lecture at CERN

A lecture on the development of science of the standard model of high energy particle physics given to some of the CERN faculty for a demonstration of how this kind of complex science should be lectured to those with any level of science/physics background from laypeople to experts who want to keep up with current discoveries outside their field.
Professor Brian Cox of Manchester University and contributor to the LHC's ATLAS and LHCb experiments, is one of the best public educators of physics of our time. He has a huge charisma and character to keep an audience's attention to fundamental topics in physics, keeping the sense of wonder but always keeping the real core of the subject intact - which is genuinely hard to do as in the process of teaching a subject like physics either the wonder gets sucked out and replaced with dry rhetoric or else the content gets sucked out and replaced with whimsical nonsense - Professor Cox helps create the balance in the same vein as other great popularizers of physics such as Carl Sagan and Richard Feynman.
His talks are always very good and try to include as many people as possible into scientific discovery and the wonders of nature which shape our individual understanding and our civilization into new frontiers.
Any of his tv series, including "Wonders of the Solar System", and his books including my favorite "The Quantum Universe: Everything That Can Happen Does Happen", co-authored by Jeff Forshaw are also must haves for any scientist young or old.

Brian Cox explains quantum mechanics in 60 seconds - BBC News

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British physicist Brian Cox is challenged by the presenter of Radio 4's 'Life Scientific', Jim Al-Khalili, to explain the rules of quantum mechanics in just a minute. Brian succeeds; while conceding that the idea that everything is inherently probabilistic, is challenging. Even Einstein found it difficult.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04hvx9z
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The Galaxy Song by Brian Cox and Patrick Moore Featuring Stephen Hawking

Buy Wonders of the Universe on Itunes.
- https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/wonders-universe-original/id424877391
Composed by Sheridan Tongue this alongside Stephan Hawking's Into the Universe is a Wonderful score.
I hope you all enjoy 🙂

BBC2 Northern Ireland: Wonders of the Universe (Tent) Ident

This ident was used to introduce Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe. It is now rarely seen before astronomy programmes.

In this clip from Wonders of the Universe Brian Cox visits The Thirteen Towers solar observatory of Chankillo in Peru. The 2,500-year-old solar calendar was built by a civilization of which very little is known. Click here for more http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6408231.stm
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Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Evolutionary Big Bang - Wonders of the Universe w/ Brian Cox - BBC

To celebrate World Space Week from 4 to 10 October 2013 we're uploading clips from Wonders of the Universe with Professor Brian Cox. With some of the world's most fascinating fossils in hand Brian considers how, but for an apparently obscure moment in the early evolutionary history of life, all the secrets of light may have remained hidden. Because although the universe is bathed in light that carries extraordinary amounts of information about where we come from, it would have remained invisible without a crucial evolutionary development that allowed us to see. Only because of that development can we now observe, capture and contemplate the incredible wonders of the universe that we inhabit.
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Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

To celebrate World Space Week we're uploading clips from Wonders of the Universe with Professor Brian Cox. Brian takes a face distorting trip in a centrifuge to explain how it is that gravity achieves its great power. Starting with the gravity on Neptune, Jupiter and then off to the extreme gravity of newly discovered Exoplanets.
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BBC Worldwide Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCWorldwide
Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

In the last episode of Professor Brian Cox's epic journey across the universe, he travels from the fossils of the Burgess Shale to the sands of the oldest desert in the world to show how light holds the key to our understanding of the whole universe, including our own deepest origins. To understand how light holds the key to the story of the universe, you first have to understand its peculiar properties. The man who first grasped these properties was Danish astronomer Ole Rømer, who in 1676 made the first quantitative measurements of the speed of light.
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Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

100,000,000,000°C: Heart of a Dying Star - World Space Week Special - Wonders of the Universe - BBC

To celebrate World Space Week 2013 we're uploading clips from Wonders of the Universe with Professor Brian Cox. As the stages of a dying star continues, Brian reveals how our origins are entwined with the life cycle of the stars.
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Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

To celebrate World Space Week 2013 we're uploading clips from Wonders of the Universe with Professor Brian Cox. Gold is a rare and precious element on Earth. Our world is made up of just 92 elements, and these same 92 elements are found throughout the entire universe. We are part of the universe because we are made of the same stuff as the universe! When a giant star, at the end of it's life, collapses in on itself, the temperatures reach 1 hundred billion degrees. Under these conditions the heaviest elements like Gold form. The explosion is known as a Supernova.
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Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

To celebrate World Space Week we're uploading clips from Wonders of the Universe with Professor Brian Cox. Professor Brian Cox takes on the story of the force that sculpts the entire universe - gravity. Starting with a zero gravity flight, Brian experiences the feeling of total weightlessness, and considers how much of an effect gravity has had on the world around us. Amazing clip from Wonders of the Universe - impossible not to smile whilst watching this!
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Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Death of the Universe - World Space Week Special - Wonders of the Universe w/ Brian Cox - BBC

To celebrate World Space Week 2013 we're uploading clips from Wonders of the Universe with Professor Brian Cox. With the theory of Black Dwarf Stars, Professor Brian Cox considers the death of the universe, a time so far in the future it defies comprehension. Brian discovers that time is not characterised by repetition but by irreversible change. From the relentless march of desert sands to the erosion of a beached freighter, the ravaging effects of time are all around us. The vast universe is subject to these same laws of change. As we look out to the cosmos, we can see the story of its evolution unfold, from the death of the first stars to the birth of the youngest.
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Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Who are we? Where do we come from? For thousands of years humanity has turned to religion and myth for answers to these enduring questions. But in this series, Brian presents a different set of answers - answers provided by science.
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Prof Brian Cox and Dr Carolyn Porco

Prof Brian Cox and Dr Carolyn Porco chatting at Spacefest. One of the joys of being at Spacefest is the chance to stumble on a spontaneous chat between a couple of the attendees...

Wonders of the Universe app review

A video review of Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe app on the Apple App Store. Follow me on Twitter @ioseducation and visit my site at ioseducation.wordpress.com

Stardust

In the second stop in his exploration of the wonders of the universe, Professor Brian Cox goes in search of humanity's very essence to answer the biggest questions of all: what are we? And where do we come from? This film is the story of matter - the stuff of which we are all made. Brian reveals how our origins are entwined with the life cycle of the stars. But he begins his journey here on Earth.

Wonders of Life BBC Trailer

January of 2013 will see the broadcast of the third incarnation in the critically acclaimed "Wonders Of" science series presented by Physicist Brian Cox. Following the highly popular Wonders of the Solar System and Wonders of the Universe which were jointly funded by the BBC and the Discovery channel, BBC Worldwide has now teamed up with China's CCTV network.
Together they have produced the new series -- Wonders of Life. In a change to the first two series which both focused on what lies beyond our planet, Wonders of Life takes a look at the natural life that surrounds us right here on planet Earth. Once again we will be guided by the calmly, enthusiastic Professor Brian Cox who has a knack for explaining the most complex and confusing subjects in science without seeming to overload your brain or bore you.
Many science TV shows can sometimes make you feel more like you are studying at a university lecture. However thanks to the skills of Professor Cox and the big budget productions the "Wonders Of" shows feel more like a blockbuster movie than a lecture and I certainly mean that in a good way. Even when Prof Brian Cox began describing the known workings of black holes and the singularity in Wonders of the Universe I could still just about follow him, just. This was almost certainly helped by the beautiful visual aids of the cutting edge Computer Generated Imagery and after all that's one of the things viewers love so much about these shows, the way they get you thinking and stretch your imagination.
Thanks to the big budget that comes with a joint production we are once again being treated to some spectacular locations and scenery in Wonders of Life, this time all filmed for real with no CGI needed. We'll see Brian visit many spectacular and beautiful places including the flooded Taal Volcano on the Philippine island of Luzon, the Australian outback and the Borneo rainforests.
For the most part though WOL doesn't focus on the Earth itself but more the amazing and sometimes weird creatures that call it home. From the Christmas Island Robber Crab to the Mantis Shrimp, this is certainly not your run of the mill nature show.

Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox sets out to go boldly where no science programme has gone before
http://uktv.co.uk/eden/item/aid/652720
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Wonders Of The Universe - Episode 1 Preview

Having explored the wonders of the solar system, Professor Brian Cox steps boldly on to an even bigger stage - the universe. Brian seeks to understand the nature of time and its role in creating both the universe and ourselves.

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